ORCID
- Nick Pratt: 0000-0002-7112-7792
- Ulrike Hohmann: 0000-0002-7127-117X
- Peter Kelly: 0000-0002-1050-7433
Abstract
This article reports the findings of a comparative study of teaching in Denmark and England; its broader aim is to help develop an approach for comparing pedagogy. Lesson observations and interviews identified the range of goals towards which teachers in each country worked and the actions these prompted. These were clustered using the lens of Bernstein’s pedagogic discourse (1990; 1996) to construct teacher roles which provided a view of pedagogy. Through this approach we have begun to identify variations in pedagogy across two countries. All teachers in this study adopted a variety of roles; of significance was the ease with which competent English teachers moved between roles. The English teachers observed adopted roles consistent with a wider techno-rationalist discourse. There was a greater subject emphasis by Danish teachers whose work was set predominantly within a democratic humanist discourse, whilst the English teachers placed a greater emphasis on applied skills.
DOI
10.1080/03057925.2013.800786
Publication Date
2013-06-18
Publication Title
Compare
Volume
44
Issue
4
ISSN
0305-7925
First Page
566
Last Page
586
Recommended Citation
Kelly, P., Dorf, H., Pratt, N., & Hohmann, U. (2013) 'Comparing teacher roles in Denmark and England', Compare, 44(4), pp. 566-586. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03057925.2013.800786